Abstract

Objective Babies receive oxygen through their umbilical cord while in the uterus and for a few minutes after birth. Currently, if the baby is not breathing well at birth, the cord is cut so as to transfer the newborn to a resuscitation unit. We sought to develop a mobile resuscitation trolley on which newly born babies can be resuscitated while still receiving oxygenated blood and the ‘placental transfusion’ through the umbilical cord. This would also prevent separation of the mother and baby in the first minutes after birth.

Design Multidisciplinary iterative product development.

Setting Clinical Engineering Department of a University Teaching Hospital.

Methods Following an initial design meeting, a series of prototypes were developed. At each stage, the prototype was reviewed by a team of experts in the laboratory and in the hospital delivery suite to determine ease of use and fitness for purpose. A commercial company was identified to collaborate on the trolley's development and secure marking with the Conformité Européenne mark, allowing the trolley to be introduced into clinical practice.

Results The trolley is a small mobile resuscitation unit based on the concept of an overbed hospital table. It can be manoeuvred to within 50 cm of the mother's pelvis so that the umbilical cord can remain intact during resuscitation, irrespective of whether the baby is born naturally, by instrumental delivery or by caesarean section. Warmth for the newborn comes from a heated mattress and the trolley has the facility to provide suction, oxygen and air.

Conclusions This is the first mobile resuscitation device designed specifically to facilitate newborn resuscitation at the bedside and with an intact cord. The next step is to assess its safety, its acceptability to clinicians and parents, and to determine whether it allows resuscitation with an intact cord.

Obstetrics

Intensive Care

Delivery

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Introduction

Obstetricians have encouraged early, or even immediate, cord clamping since the 1960s as part of the active management of the third stage of labour to prevent maternal haemorrhage.1 For term births, timing of cord clamping does not have a clear effect on postpartum blood loss. However, immediate clamping reduces neonatal haemoglobin and neonatal jaundice.2 Although these effects are generally transient and well tolerated, reduced iron levels are still seen at age 3–6 months, an effect associated with developmental delay.3,4 The WHO,5 the International Federation of Gynaecology and Obstetrics,6 and the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) in the UK7 now recommend deferring cord clamping.

In the UK, about a third of newborn babies are attended at birth by neonatal resuscitation staff. For most, all that happens is an assessment, stimulation, thermal care and simple airway management. Around 15% of babies receive active resuscitation at birth, such as mask ventilation, intubation, cardiac massage or drug administration.

When a baby requires assessment or stabilisation and support at birth, standard practice heretofore is to clamp and cut the cord immediately and then take the baby to a resuscitation platform, usually at the side of the room or in another room. This means that the period of transitional circulation is foreshortened. In addition, parents are often not able to see or touch their baby at birth.8 Evidence from other areas of adult and child resuscitation has shown that family presence is preferred by relatives and by staff9–13 and is now standard in these settings. This issue has not been explored for care after birth, and to date newborn resuscitation has always been away from the woman and her partner.

The need for immediate neonatal care and support increases with increasing prematurity. For preterm infants, deferred cord clamping is associated with decreased transfusion for anaemia, decreased low blood pressure requiring inotropic support and less low-grade intraventricular haemorrhage compared with immediate clamping.14 There is an increase in jaundice, but the long-term effects are unclear. Systematic review suggests that strategies for increased placental transfusion after birth may improve neonatal mortality rate in very premature babies,15 but it is uncertain whether any benefits would be negated by delayed resuscitation,16 and the current European Resuscitation Council recommendation therefore states that “for babies requiring resuscitation, resuscitative intervention remains the priority.”17

Very preterm babies are those most likely to experience these major morbidities and, potentially, might benefit from deferred clamping. It therefore seems important to develop a strategy to allow initial resuscitation with the cord intact. A survey of the UK Extended Neonatal Network in 2009 to assess views on timing of cord clamping and placental transfusion found that two-thirds of those surveyed thought that initial care with the cord intact is potentially feasible for preterm vaginal births. Just under half thought this was possible for preterm caesarean births (Duley, personal communication, 2009).

The aim of this paper is to describe development and preliminary testing of a mobile trolley to enable newborn care and support at the bedside, potentially with an intact cord.

Methods

Initial concept

Resuscitation with an intact cord has been described by several authors,18–21 but no agreed technique had emerged. In January 2010, DH convened a 1-day meeting in Worcester of eight UK clinicians and researchers (AB, SB, LD, AG, AMH, DH, DO and ADW - see Acknowledgement) with a common interest in practical methods for initiating neonatal assessment and resuscitation at birth before the cord is clamped and cut. From this came the idea of a small mobile bedside resuscitation trolley, extending the concept of the platform that had been used for a cord clamping study in Glasgow (figure 1).18 The acronym BASICS for ‘Bedside Assessment, Stabilisation and Initial Cardiorespiratory Support’ was proposed, and this established a working title of the ‘BASICS trolley’. The key concepts were that this trolley would need to keep the baby warm, allow suction and respiratory support within a 50 cm radius from the mother's uterus. ADW drew up designs during the meeting (figure 2). It was agreed that he would formalise these, take the design of the trolley forward with the medical engineering department in Liverpool and register the design rights.

The Glasgow trolley used in the study by Aladangady et al18 that inspired the first designs of the Bedside Assessment, Stabilisation and Initial Cardiorespiratory Support (BASICS) trolley (photograph courtesy of AMH).

The design drawing that came out of discussions at the first group meeting in Worcestershire showing (A) the trolley design and (B) the way in which it might be positioned over the operating table at caesarean section (drawings in February 2010 by ADW, reprinted with his permission).

Development of the prototypes

Funding to support development of the concept into a prototype was secured from the National Institute of Health Research (NIHR; LD), with additional support from the Liverpool Women's Hospital ‘Newborn Appeal’. In collaboration with the Department of Clinical Engineering at the Royal Liverpool University Hospital, the first prototype was developed by PW, using a modified hospital overbed table (figure 3). This first early prototype was developed with support from the development team (LD, AG, DH, PW, ADW and CWY), which met in Liverpool, and included input from a service user representative. Various mock delivery scenarios were staged to assess the optimum size and reach of the trolley platform. Discussions included what equipment needed to be available on the trolley to provide blended oxygen and air and to provide positive end-expiratory pressure. The Liverpool prototype (figure 4) was awarded ‘Best Redesign in Cardiovascular Medicine’ at the Medical Futures Awards in June 2011.

The first Bedside Assessment, Stabilisation and Initial Cardiorespiratory Support (BASICS) prototype (by PW in April 2011, reprinted with his permission). Note that the problem of how to keep the baby warm was still not resolved.

A key problem for the first prototype was how to keep the baby warm. Traditional resuscitaires have an overhead heater, but this was not practical for a trolley designed to go under the legs of a woman in lithotomy position or over an operating table. A commercial company (Inditherm plc) was approached to adapt their heated mattresses for the trolley. The company then agreed to collaborate on further development, with the aim of taking the product to market. The second prototype, developed in collaboration with Inditherm and manufactured by them (figure 5), has improved mobility and flexibility that allows the height and position of the trolley platform to be adjusted. This trolley was marked with the Conformité Européenne (CE) logo in October 2012 and is now marketed by Inditherm as ‘LifeStart’.

The LifeStart trolley manufactured by Inditherm (October 2012, with permission).

BASICS trolley design

A key element in the design is flexibility to allow the baby to be placed on the trolley while the umbilical cord is still intact. This required the trolley platform to be manoeuvrable: able to be lowered under the mother's legs when in lithotomy position or raised up high to reach over the woman on an operating table. The umbilical cord can be short, so the platform has to be able to be placed close to the woman's introitus. This is achieved by having a central pillar that can be adjusted up or down, and a narrow platform that reaches out from the pillar with raised edges for safety. Even if the mother delivers the baby on the floor, the trolley can be moved to the site of birth and provide the necessary resuscitation gases and suction for the baby to remain attached and with the mother.

Thermal support is provided by the CosyTherm electric heated mattress. This is adjustable through a range of temperatures and takes only a few minutes to heat up. The trolley has a timer built into the platform, with audible Apgar reminder bleeps at 1 and 5 min.

Fixed around the central pillar are two universal Medirails for additional equipment. These allow each hospital to customise the trolley to their specific requirements. Our early assessments used a Tom Thumb Infant Resuscitator (Viamed, Keighley, UK), oxygen blender (Inspiration Health Care Ltd., Leicestershire, UK), a suction bottle driven by the wall-supplied air supply (Oxylitre Ltd., Manchester, UK) and the control unit for the CosyTherm heated mattress (Inditherm, Rotherham, UK). We connect it with hoses to the air and oxygen wall supply. Other equipment that could be added is a light on a flexible stalk, a saturation monitor or a storage basket (for keeping the laryngoscope, hats, saturation monitor).

Results

The trolley was introduced into clinical service at Liverpool Women's Hospital after CE marking. We describe our early experiences here. More formal evaluation of safety and acceptability to clinicians and to parents has been reported separately.22

The first use was for an ex utero intrapartum treatment procedure at caesarean section in October 2012. Feedback from staff and parents was positive. Use was then extended to low-risk deliveries. All parents appeared appreciative of being with their baby during the first moments of life. Clinicians have been slower to accept initial bedside care, and expressed anxieties about the parents being so close to the baby during resuscitation. There have also been practical issues to resolve, particularly in the operating theatre where tubing for air and oxygen can be a trip hazard.

It has also been clear that introducing the trolley for initial care and stabilisation at birth requires teamwork. The equipment must be checked and moved into position ready for the birth. Positioning of the trolley and neonatal team close to the woman needs negotiation with midwifery and obstetric teams. Presently, therefore, the neonatal team are called earlier than for traditional care at the roomside. Once the baby is born, the midwifery and obstetric teams need to understand what is happening during care at the bedside, and will often have a role in supporting the woman and her partner, and explaining to them what is happening.

When using the trolley at a caesarean section, a sterile Mayo tray cover is draped over the platform. The neonatal team member who will provide care at birth scrubs and puts on a sterile gown and gloves so as to prevent contamination of the operating field. Once the baby is on the trolley platform, the sterility rules are relaxed, so that the scrubbed neonatal team member can touch and use non-sterile equipment such as the laryngoscope, timer and hat. It is then important that the sterile field is not re-entered or contaminated. If ongoing resuscitation is required, then, after the cord is cut, the trolley can be moved away from the operating table to allow care to continue without interrupting the surgeon.

Discussion

Main findings

We have developed a mobile neonatal resuscitation trolley to allow newborn babies to be assessed and resuscitated alongside their mothers with, or without, an intact cord.

Strengths and limitations

Clinicians and researchers who wish to implement and evaluate deferred cord clamping for all births have previously faced a problem: How do you achieve this in those babies who require immediate resuscitation? This trolley has demonstrated the feasibility of providing initial neonatal care and stabilisation at the bedside, and to do this while the cord is intact. The trolley now requires evaluation to assess its safety in routine clinical service, and its acceptability to clinicians and parents. Although parents of premature babies describe their first physical contact as very significant, it is frequently delayed until some time after birth on the special care baby unit.8 With the BASICS trolley, the mother can touch and speak to her newborn baby while it is undergoing assessment, and our initial experience is that parents value this opportunity.22

Introducing neonatal care at the bedside requires a multidisciplinary approach. The attending team need to prepare for, and be confident in, providing neonatal resuscitation under more direct intense parental scrutiny. Everyone present at the birth need to understand their role in supporting this care strategy, and supporting the woman and her partner.

Currently ‘deferred’ cord clamping for very premature babies occurs after 30–45 s, even though placental transfusion is likely to continue for longer. This reflects the desire not to delay initial neonatal care and support. The BASICS trolley should allow evaluation of a more physiological approach to cord clamping for all births, including sick and very premature babies. An ongoing pilot randomised trial compares cord clamping within 20 s with clamping after at least 2 min for births below 32 weeks’ gestation (ISRCTN21456601). In this study, some units are using the BASICS trolley while others are using their normal resuscitaire moved to the bedside.19,21 The pilot is to assess feasibility of a large UK randomised trial.

Conclusion

This is the first mobile resuscitation unit designed specifically to facilitate newborn resuscitation at the bedside, with an intact cord. Further evaluation will assess safety and acceptability, and whether resuscitation with an intact cord to allow longer for the neonatal circulation to be established improves outcome.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank Worcestershire Royal Hospital who hosted the first development meeting. They thank Inditherm and their managing director Nick Bettles (NB) for their work in developing the fully functional CE marked mobile resuscitaire from the initial prototype. They thank David Odd (DO) and Ms Rabia Imtiaz who were part of the initial design meeting in Worcestershire Royal Hospital. Gill Gyte (GG) attended the Liverpool design meetings and provided important input into the trolley design. Tony Fisher, Head of Department of Clinical Engineering at the Royal Liverpool University Teaching Hospital, provided important advice about intellectual property as well as agreeing to develop the BASICS prototype in his department at a discounted cost. David Hutchon (DH) convened the original meeting at Worcestershire Royal Hospital to explore practical methods for neonatal resuscitation with an intact cord, and was named as one of the inventors on the original registration. He was also a member of the team for the Medical Futures award in 2010, provided input into the design of the BASICS trolley prototype, and first identified Inditherm as a commercial partner.

., ALSPAC Study Team. Should infants be screened for anaemia? A prospective study investigating the relation between haemoglobin at 8, 12, and 18 months and development at 18 months. Arch Dis Child2001;84:480–5. doi:10.1136/adc.84.6.480

. Do parents want to be present during invasive procedures performed on their children in the emergency department? A survey of 400 parents. Ann Emerg Med1999;34:70–4. doi:10.1016/S0196-0644(99)70274-X

Footnotes

Contributors The initial trolley concept and design was developed by AB, SB, LD, AG, AMH, DH, DO and ADW at the meeting organised by DH in Worcester. Subsequent meetings, attended by AB, NB, LD, AG, GG, DH, ADW, PW and CWY led to the development of the prototype. ADW wrote the first draft of the manuscript, which was subsequently revised by AB, SB, LD, AG, AMH, ADW, PW and CWY. All authors approved the final version of the manuscript.

Funding This paper presents independent research funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) under its Programme Grants for Applied Research funding scheme (RP–PG–0609-10107). Additional support came from the Department of Clinical Engineering who offered their services at reduced cost, and the Liverpool Women's ‘Newborn Appeal’. AB and DH provided personal funding to attend all meetings and the Medical Futures awards. Inditherm Ltd manufactured the final trolley and obtained its CE marking.

Competing interests It has been agreed that any financial remuneration to the original development team will be donated to charity. LD is the chief investigator for a trial comparing alternative strategies for timing of cord clamping, for which this trolley is one strategy for providing care at the bedside.

Ethics approval The commercially produced trolley (with CE mark) was subsequently introduced into clinical service at Liverpool Women's Hospital following approval from the Medical Devices Committee, the head of Research and Development, and the Clinical Director for the Neonatology Directorate.

Data sharing statement Unpublished technical files on the development of the trolley are available on application from the authors.

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